Namibia Seal Hunt Sparks Emotions, Calls for Tourism Boycott

In The Ecologist, writerTafline Laylin discusses Namibia’s annual seal cull and the fierce debate between opponents who find the cull worse than cruel and the Namibian government. Each year tens of thousands of seals, mostly cubs but some adults, are killed for the global fur trade. The government defends the industry with its claims that the cull is necessary to prevent local fisheries from depletion. Critics of the practice and the pictures of the cull will remind you of the harp seal controversy in Canada during the 1980s. Meanwhile animal rights groups are calling for a boycott of Namibia tourism.

Pro-sealers argue that the annual harvest is justified because seals compete with the fishing industry, which is the fastest growing sector of the Namibian economy. Adult Cape Fur seals eat approximately 270 kg of fish a year, including hake, sardines, and anchovies, but conservationists worry that culling seals without first conducting scientific studies could upset an already fragile and complicated ecosystem. South African fishermen used the same argument before the government banned sealing in 1990, but the restoration of large seal colonies has not had a detrimental impact on South Africa's fishing industry since.